Australia’s recovery deepens
by Alan Thornhill
Australia’s economic recovery is deepening.
And the Federal government’s economic stimulus is playing its part.
Fresh evidence, on both fronts, showed up in new capital spending figures, that the Bureau of Statistics has just released.
These showed that spending on industrial equipment, plant and machinery leapt by 12.4 per cent in the December quarter to $15.1 billion, on seasonally adjusted figures.
That was 7.2 per cent higher than the amount spent in the December quarter of 2008.
The bureau took the rare step of noting that
a large number of companies, which responded to its survey, said they had taken advantage of a tax break, that the government offered, to purchase new cars.
That break was part of the Federal government’s stimulus package.
The bureau’s figures strongly suggest that Australian car makers increased investment in their plants, to cope with this extra demand.
The bureau also reported that full time average weekly earnings, in the private sector, rose by 1.5 per cent in November and by 5.4 per cent over the year.
The comparable figures, for the public sector, were 1.3 per cent growth for the month and a 5.7 per cent rise over the year.
The Treasurer, Wayne Swan, told parliament that investment in private sector housing had fallen by more than 20 per cent last year, in the wake of the global economic crisis.
“But that has been offset by an increase of 42 per cent in public construction activity,” he added.
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Alan Thornhill is a parliamentary press gallery journalist. Private Briefing is updated daily with Australian personal finance news, analysis, and commentary.
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